Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 12Citation - Scopus: 12High Strain-Rate Deformation Analysis of Open-Cell Aluminium Foam(Elsevier, 2023) Mauko, Anja; Duarte, Isabel; Borovinšek, Matej; Vesenjak, Matej; Ren, Zoran; Sarıkaya, Mustafa; Güden, MustafaThis study investigated the high-strain rate mechanical properties of open-cell aluminium foam M-pore®. While previous research has examined the response of this type of foam under quasi-static and transitional dynamic loading conditions, there is a lack of knowledge about its behaviour under higher strain rates (transitional and shock loading regimes). To address this gap in understanding, cylindrical open-cell foam specimens were tested using a modified Direct Impact Hopkinson Bar (DIHB) apparatus over a wide range of strain rates, up to 93 m/s. The results showed a strong dependency of the foam's behaviour on the loading rate, with increased plateau stress and changes in deformation front formation and propagation at higher strain rates. The internal structure of the specimens was examined using X-ray micro-computed tomography (mCT). The mCT images were used to build simplified 3D numerical models of analysed aluminium foam specimens that were used in computational simulations of their behaviour under all experimentally tested loading regimes using LS-DYNA software. The overall agreement between the experimental and computational results was good enough to validate the built numerical models capable of correctly simulating the mechanical response of analysed aluminium foam at different loading rates. © 2023 The AuthorsArticle Citation - WoS: 23Citation - Scopus: 22Modeling of Polystyrene Under Confinement: Exploring the Limits of Iterative Boltzmann Inversion(American Chemical Society, 2013) Bayramoğlu, Beste; Faller, RolandWe explore the limits of a purely structure based coarse-graining technique, the iterative Boltzmann inversion (IBI), in the coarse-graining of a confined concentrated polystyrene solution. In the first place, some technical considerations and challenges encountered in the course of the optimization process are represented. The concepts of the choice of the initial potentials and the cross-dependency of the interactions as well as the order of optimization are discussed in detail. Furthermore, the transferability of a previously developed CG confined polystyrene solution model, the "parent CG confined model", to different degrees of confinement at constant concentration and temperature is examined. We investigate if a CG force field developed for a confined polymer solution by IBI is sensitive to changes in the degree of localization or arrangement of polymers near the surfaces although the concentration is kept constant. For this purpose, reference atomistic simulations on systems of different confinement levels have been performed. The differences in the structure and dynamics of the chains are addressed. Results are compared with those of an unconfined (bulk) system at the same concentration. The chain dimensions and orientations as a function of the distance from the surfaces are also reported. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first computational study that investigates the structural behavior of polymers in close proximity of the surfaces in a concentrated polymer solution rather than in a melt. Transferability of the parent CG confined model is tested by employing the parent force field in CG simulations of the reference systems. Results indicate that the degree of arrangement of monomers and solvent molecules near the surfaces is an important factor that needs to be paid attention to when considering the application of a CG force field developed by IBI to different degrees of confinement.Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5Determination of the Dill Parameters of Thick Positive Resist for Use in Modeling Applications(Elsevier Ltd., 2011) Roeder, G.; Liu, S.; Aygün, Gülnur; Evanschitzky, P.; Erdmann, A.; Schellenberger, M.; Pfitzner, LThe determination of Dill parameters of thick resist is very important to improve simulation models of resist exposure and real world processes. A new extraction technique of Dill parameters based on spectroscopic ellipsometry in combination with an advanced resist exposure model is proposed for thick resist analysis. The complex refractive index of the resist is related to the relative concentration of the photoactive compound in the resist in order to describe the vertical distribution of the refractive index and the extinction coefficient. Moreover, Dill parameters are extracted by directly fitting the bleaching curves to the measured ellipsometry data. The new approach was investigated experimentally by spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements on AZ5214E resist with two moderate layer thickness values in order to verify the accuracy of the new method. Dill parameters were extracted by using this new technique and by applying resist samples subjected to different exposure doses. Possible reasons for the variation of Dill parameters depending on resist thickness are explained. Furthermore, advantages, limitations and potential improvements of the model are discussed. Finally, the impact of Dill parameter variation on image formation in the resist is demonstrated by applying the spectroscopic ellipsometer analysis results as input parameters to the lithography simulator Dr.LiTHO.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 7Robust Output Tracking Control of a Surface Vessel(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2008) Lee, Dongbin; Tatlıcıoğlu, Enver; Burg, Timothy C.; Dawson, Darren M.In this paper, tracking control of a three degree-of-freedom marine vessel is examined. The primary motivation for this work is the compensation needed for the added mass common to surface vessels, resulting in an asymmetric inertia matrix. Two control schemes are considered: a full-state feedback controller and an output feedback controller. Numerical simulation results are shown to demonstrate the validity of these proposed controllers.Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 3Numerical Model for Biaxial Earthquake Response of Reinforced Concrete(John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2007) Dönmez, Cemalettin; Sözen, Mete A.A numerical constitutive model is developed to simulate the biaxial nonlinear flexural response of slender reinforced concrete members subjected to earthquake excitation. The model is tested using data from two types of experiments with reinforced concrete elements: (1) elements subjected to varying pseudo-static biaxial lateral loads and (2) elements that responded biaxially to simulated earthquake motions. The goal for the model was not only to help determine the absolute maxima for earthquake response but also to enable calculation of the entire waveform, including the ranges of low- and moderate-amplitude response. The comparisons of measured and calculated results and sensitivity of the proposed model to variations in the input parameters are discussed. The output was found to be insensitive to the changes in input parameters related to concrete and sensitive to input parameters related to reinforcing steel. The results of the calculations were tested using experimental data.Article Citation - WoS: 16Citation - Scopus: 18Kinematic Wave Model of Bed Profiles in Alluvial Channels(John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2006) Tayfur, Gökmen; Singh, Vijay P.A mathematical model, based on the kinematic wave (KW) theory, is developed for describing the evolution and movement of bed profiles in alluvial channels. The model employs a functional relation between sediment transport rate and concentration, a relation between flow velocity and depth and Velikanov's formula relating suspended sediment concentration to flow variables. Laboratory flume and field data are used to test the model. Transient bed profiles in alluvial channels are also simulated for several hypothetical cases involving different water flow and sediment concentration characteristics. The model-simulated bed profiles are found to be in good agreement with what is observed in the laboratory, and they seem theoretically reasonable for hypothetical cases. The model results reveal that the mean particle velocity and maximum concentration (maximum bed form elevation) strongly affect transient bed profiles.Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5The Circuit Realization of Mexican Hat Wavelet Function(Urban und Fischer Verlag GmbH und Co. KG, 2005) Özkurt, Nalan; Savacı, Ferit Acar; Gündüzalp, MustafaA wavelet network circuit implementation for Mexican Hat mother wavelet has been proposed for nonlinear function approximation which can also be used for the realization of the algebraic nonlinear components. The Mexican Hat mother wavelet function has been implemented with discrete circuit components and it has been observed that the experimental waveform obtained from the realized circuit is approximately same as the Spice simulation of the original function. The circuit simulations of exemplar functions implemented in Spice are also given. © 2004 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.Conference Object Approximate Best Linear Unbiased Channel Estimation for Frequency Selective Channels With Long Delay Spreads: Robustness To Timing and Carrier Offsets(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2005) Özen, Serdar; Nerayanuru, Sreenivasa M.; Pladdy, Christopher; Fimoff, Mark J.We provide an iterative and a non-iterative channel impulse response (CIR) estimation algorithm for communication systems which utilize a periodically transmitted training sequence within a continuous stream of information symbols. The iterative procedure calculates the (semi-blind) Best Linear Unbiased Estimate (BLUE) of the CIR. The non-iterative version is an approximation to the BLUE CIR estimate, denoted by a-BLUE, achieving almost similar performance, with much lower complexity. Indeed we show that, with reasonable assumptions, a-BLUE channel estimate can be obtained by using a stored copy of a pre-computed matrix in the receiver which enables the use of the initial CIR estimate by the subsequent equalizer tap weight calculator. Simulation results are provided to demonstrate the performance of the novel algorithms for 8-VSB ATSC Digital TV system. We also provide a simulation study of the robustness of the a-BLUE algorithm to timing and carrier phase offsets.Conference Object Citation - WoS: 6Citation - Scopus: 11Dynamically Adaptive Partition-Based Data Distribution Management(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2005) Kumova, Bora İsmailPerformance and scalability of distributed simulations depends primarily on the effectiveness of the employed data distribution management (DDM) algorithm, which aims at reducing the overall computational and messaging effort on the shared data to a necessary minimum. Existing DDM approaches, which are variations and combinations of two basic techniques, namely region-based and grid-based techniques, perform purely in the presence of load differences. We introduce the partition-based technique that allows for variable-size partitioning shared data. Based on this technique, a novel DDM algorithm is introduced that is dynamically adaptive to cluster formations in the shared data as well as in the physical location of the simulation objects. Since the re-distribution is sensitive to inter-relationships between shared data and simulation objects, a balanced constellation has the additional advantage to be of minimal messaging effort. Furthermore, dynamic system scalability is facilitated, as bottlenecks are avoided.
